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Athletes are taking to it like hipsters to a dimly lit laneway bar...
Cadel Evans
I even shave my gooch!
The Australian public loves a hero. We worship successful athletes like the Incas (or George Hamilton) worshiped the sun. Whether it’s a full-blown ticker-tape parade or a boozy victory song in the sheds, we love winning – and celebrating those who win. But there’s one thing we love even more than a winner – it’s a villain.
The villains in Australian sport sell just as many if not more papers than their successful, blemish-free adversaries. Ryan Tandy, Ricky Nixon, Sally Robbins, Robert Lui, Jason Akermanis, Brett Stewart – these folk have been in the papers for much longer than any successful, non-controversial athlete I can think of. And yes, I wanted to include Rebecca Wilson and Peter Roebuck in that list, but apart from being absolute villains in my mind, their complete absence of sporting or other talent prevents them from keeping such esteemed company. [Ed: While his writing style is questionable at best, Roebuck is allegedly a fierce spanker of young South African males]
Across the Australian media, two characters have contested the undesirable spotlight for villain of the week. One a colourful yet heartless dictator who seized power of a small but powerful Arab country by way of military coup, and the other a New Zealand-born Wallaby fly half.
Before his death this week Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, aka fuzzhead (seriously), certainly fits into the Bond-style villain category. He had a team of stunning Amazonian women as bodyguards, designed and owned his very own rocket car, sported a plethora of wacky outfits, and always carried a golden gun.
Both Gaddafi and Cooper seem to be hated in spite of their flair; they’ve both been put out of action this week (one permanently), and both have extremely dubious taste (Gaddafi in clothes, Cooper in women). But that’s where the similarities end. As Cooper sits at home for the next six months recovering from knee surgery he might be asking himself why the public have branded him a villain, and what he can do to turn this image around.
As always, we at The Public Apology have some suggestions for the young fly-half:
And if all these fail, accept that you’ll always be hated and likely end up spending your final days hiding in a drain pipe. Go and get yourself a smoking hot pack of cheerleaders to follow you round and aid as protection from annoying sports journalists.
And maybe even splash out on some kind of super car, the odd safari suit and a pair of golden boots.
By Luke Meredith
Tagged in: Berrick Barnes, Brett Stewart, Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, Jason Akermanis, Lance Armstrong testicle, Quade Cooper, Ricky Nixon, Robert Lui, Ryan Tandy, Sally Robins, Stephanie Rice, villains in Australian sport@QuinnKitten @GoTashYourself Would have been weird for the bogues to see a horse so far away from its natural habitat: Randwick Racecourse. 4 days ago
@QuinnKitten Who's the horse? I need to know. #NRLeducation "sad for the Horse, bounce back fast you big ugly bastard" 4 days ago
We take on the cashed-up bogan wedding of the year: Michael Clarke and Kyly Boldy (WARNING, may contain puns) - http://t.co/Wg6tts7P 4 days ago
@rdhinds We covered the real reasons behind Barton's Morrissey quiff and penchant for quoting Freud earlier this year: http://t.co/PY14KPFt 5 days ago
Loved Drazic on Bikie Wars last night. 5 days ago
Non-profit body to offer football education classes to #migrants, #Demetriou seeks #AFL expansion into third world: http://t.co/nVvURBsP 5 days ago
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